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Connected Consumers Changing CE

Las Vegas - If you think your head is spinning dealing with the
brave new world of connected electronics, consider the marketers who now have
to sell products to newly empowered consumers carrying devices that keep them
linked to the Internet at all times.

During the Brand Keynote Panel at the Hilton Theater, six
high-ranking marketing executives gave their views of this sea change, how it
impacts their companies and how it will affect consumers as the object of those
marketing messages.

What was surprising is the fact there were no definitive answers
to these questions. Realistically, one shouldn't expect them as an avalanche of
new technology spreads across the globe, which is readily apparent at the 2012 International
CES.

Moderator Michael Kassan
pointed out that more marketers than ever are attending the show so they learn
about the latest technologies and what it means for people selling everything
from cars to Pop-Tarts. CES - which Unilever CMO Keith Wood said now means
"Connecting Everyone Socially"- is the launch pad for these devices, and
marketers need to understand the changes they'll bring in order to survive.

"Mobile is going to revolutionize retail - we've known this for
decades," said Stephen Quinn, Walmart chief marketing officer. As he recalled
how male customers would use their cellphones to get buying directions from
their wives, to knowing chuckles from the crowd, Quinn stated how the move into
the social space - with everyone posting on Facebook and other social media
sites - would have a "massive impact" on retail.

"What we see at Facebook
is that human behavior hasn't actually changed since Neolithic times. People
lived in villages of about 150, the average number of friends on Facebook,"
said Carolyn Everson, global marketing solutions VP. "Technology is connecting
us to people we know and those we don't know and within four degrees of
separation you're connected to about a million people."

"We're seeing our customers are massively engaged in this," said
Walmart's Quinn. The question for him was "how do we create an ecosystem around
our joint objectives," with vendors. Along with cash register receipts Quinn
watches other metrics. "We are watching our fan count on Facebook, using that
as a real key metric."

Another issue raised was the growing amount of data posted to
social-media sites. GE's Beth Comstock mused about who owns the data, what was
its value and how marketers could use it to customize sales pitches to
individual consumers.

One thing for sure was the growth of connected individuals. "The
next billion people coming onto the Internet will be coming via mobile, not the
desktop," said Keith Weed. "Technology is changing behavior and as marketer
you're interested in how consumers behave, what they value, and how you can
make their life experiences richer."

Since this is CES, Kassan queried the panelists as to what they
considered their indispensible tech device. To a man, and woman, it was a
smartphone.